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Eu Treaty files waiting time - EU1 or EU1A

Forum to discuss all things Blarney | Ireland immigration

Moderators: Casa, archigabe, CR001, push, JAJ, ca.funke, Amber, zimba, vinny, Obie, EUsmileWEallsmile, batleykhan, meself2, geriatrix, John, ChetanOjha, Administrator

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castelrink
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Posts: 5
Joined: Mon Jun 23, 2025 4:05 pm
Spain

Re: Eu Treaty files waiting time - EU1 or EU1A

Post by castelrink » Mon Jun 30, 2025 5:45 pm

farofa_de_banana wrote:
Fri Jun 27, 2025 3:44 pm
castelrink wrote:
Tue Jun 24, 2025 5:29 pm
Hey everyone, just wanted to share my wife’s EUTR1 application timeline in case it helps anyone who’s also waiting. She submitted the application recently and we haven’t received a final decision yet. Here's how it's going so far:
  • 20 January 2025 – Sent all required documents
  • 21 January 2025 – Documents were received by Immigration
  • 17 February 2025 – Received temporary Stamp 4 (valid until 16 August 2025)
  • As of 24 June 2025 – No final decision yet
Will update the thread as soon as we hear back.
If anyone submitted their application around the same time, I’d really appreciate it if you got in touch so we can compare timelines!
Our case is similar.

06/02/2025 : sent documents
07/02/2025 : documents received
04/03/2025 : received acknowledgement letter. It asks to send documents but the list is empty. IRP was granted until 06/08/2025

We can see that cases submitted much later were already finished. We asked in the portal regarding this empty list but after months there is no answer.
Hey! Our situation is quite similar indeed.

I also submitted a query through the portal over a month ago and still haven’t received any reply. Unfortunately, that seems to be common. You could try emailing them directly at support@eutrjustice.cloud.gov.ie or calling 01 616 7700, but in my experience, they usually just tell you to check the website and don’t provide specific info over the phone.

By the way, I noticed the Brazilian flag on your profile, just as a curiosity, my wife is also from Brazil! So that’s another thing we’ve got in common.

If you want to discuss further or share updates, feel free to message social media details removed by moderator.

Hope things move forward for you soon!

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CR001
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Re: Eu Treaty files waiting time - EU1 or EU1A

Post by CR001 » Mon Jun 30, 2025 6:37 pm

castelrink wrote:
Mon Jun 30, 2025 5:45 pm
Hey! Our situation is quite similar indeed.

I also submitted a query through the portal over a month ago and still haven’t received any reply. Unfortunately, that seems to be common. You could try emailing them directly at support@eutrjustice.cloud.gov.ie or calling 01 616 7700, but in my experience, they usually just tell you to check the website and don’t provide specific info over the phone.

By the way, I noticed the Brazilian flag on your profile, just as a curiosity, my wife is also from Brazil! So that’s another thing we’ve got in common.

If you want to discuss further or share updates, feel free to message social media details removed by moderator.

Hope things move forward for you soon!
Members are not permitted to post personal contact or social media information on the forum. Please do not post these.
Char (CR001 not Casa)
In life you cannot press the Backspace button!!
Please DO NOT send me a PM for immigration advice. I reserve the right to ignore the PM and not respond.

castelrink
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Posts: 5
Joined: Mon Jun 23, 2025 4:05 pm
Spain

Re: Eu Treaty files waiting time - EU1 or EU1A

Post by castelrink » Mon Jun 30, 2025 8:20 pm

CR001 wrote:
Mon Jun 30, 2025 6:37 pm
castelrink wrote:
Mon Jun 30, 2025 5:45 pm
Hey! Our situation is quite similar indeed.

I also submitted a query through the portal over a month ago and still haven’t received any reply. Unfortunately, that seems to be common. You could try emailing them directly at support@eutrjustice.cloud.gov.ie or calling 01 616 7700, but in my experience, they usually just tell you to check the website and don’t provide specific info over the phone.

By the way, I noticed the Brazilian flag on your profile, just as a curiosity, my wife is also from Brazil! So that’s another thing we’ve got in common.

If you want to discuss further or share updates, feel free to message social media details removed by moderator.

Hope things move forward for you soon!
Members are not permitted to post personal contact or social media information on the forum. Please do not post these.
My bad! I think I cannot delete it, but will take it into account, thanks for mentioning it

farofa_de_banana
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Posts: 9
Joined: Thu Mar 07, 2024 11:54 am
Brazil

Re: Eu Treaty files waiting time - EU1 or EU1A

Post by farofa_de_banana » Tue Jul 01, 2025 12:45 pm

castelrink wrote:
Mon Jun 30, 2025 5:45 pm
farofa_de_banana wrote:
Fri Jun 27, 2025 3:44 pm
castelrink wrote:
Tue Jun 24, 2025 5:29 pm
Hey everyone, just wanted to share my wife’s EUTR1 application timeline in case it helps anyone who’s also waiting. She submitted the application recently and we haven’t received a final decision yet. Here's how it's going so far:
  • 20 January 2025 – Sent all required documents
  • 21 January 2025 – Documents were received by Immigration
  • 17 February 2025 – Received temporary Stamp 4 (valid until 16 August 2025)
  • As of 24 June 2025 – No final decision yet
Will update the thread as soon as we hear back.
If anyone submitted their application around the same time, I’d really appreciate it if you got in touch so we can compare timelines!
Our case is similar.

06/02/2025 : sent documents
07/02/2025 : documents received
04/03/2025 : received acknowledgement letter. It asks to send documents but the list is empty. IRP was granted until 06/08/2025

We can see that cases submitted much later were already finished. We asked in the portal regarding this empty list but after months there is no answer.
Hey! Our situation is quite similar indeed.

I also submitted a query through the portal over a month ago and still haven’t received any reply. Unfortunately, that seems to be common. You could try emailing them directly at support@eutrjustice.cloud.gov.ie or calling 01 616 7700, but in my experience, they usually just tell you to check the website and don’t provide specific info over the phone.

By the way, I noticed the Brazilian flag on your profile, just as a curiosity, my wife is also from Brazil! So that’s another thing we’ve got in common.

If you want to discuss further or share updates, feel free to message social media details removed by moderator.

Hope things move forward for you soon!
Hello, castelrink.

I have been called by the EU Treaty Rights Division and asked to email a recent payslip to confirm I'm still employed. I believe it's moving now.

In your case if nothing happens until he 20th I believe you could open a case with solvit.

laika_dogg
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Posts: 5
Joined: Thu Jul 10, 2025 9:19 pm
United Kingdom

Re: Eu Treaty files waiting time - EU1 or EU1A

Post by laika_dogg » Fri Jul 11, 2025 8:42 am

Hi all,

Can someone please help me navigate my situation. It's a bit too confusing and I'm getting very anxious by the day. Quick status: my IRP expires on 24th August 2025 and I'm currently pregnant expecting our child in October 2025.

I've been living in Ireland since August 2022. My husband is a UK national who grew up in Ireland since he was 7. He moved to Dubai in 2018 which is where we met and we got married in Dubai in 2020. He wanted to move back to Ireland but due to COVID everything was closed for a couple years. In 2022 I applied for join UK national spouse visa and moved to Ireland with him.

Because of Brexit in 2020, apparently the rules were still a bit unclear for UK national bringing family back to Ireland. I was told at the airport to goto the Garde to get my IRP. The Garde gave me an IRP for 1 year under "Article 50 TEU" and told me to come back yearly. In 2023, when I went back for renewal, he gave me by IRP for 2 years under the same permit type.

This year, when I want to renew my IRP, the Garde said everything is moved online. One of the documents required to renew is "Current permission letter under which you were granted your permit" which I never received from anyone. When I emailed the DoJ, explaining the situation, they said I need to apply through the EUTR1 form. I tried to clarify with them a couple times asking if I need to do it all over again and they said that's the only way.

We filled the form and sent all the supporting documents to their office. (Courier sent on 5th July, delivered on 8th of July). I did not mention in the email to them that I'm pregnant but I explained it in the documents I sent.

Meanwhile I contacted immigration council, who were confused why they are asking me this now ? Apparently they gave me my IRP without this form before? They reaffirmed I've done nothing illegal but things were confusing post Brexit etc etc. They said it's best I sent the form and to wait out their response.

I'm just really panicking now coz I feel like I'm getting the brunt of the stick for something the Garde should have done. My IRP expires end of August and I'm not even sure anymore if I'm on the right path to getting the new permit coz I thought the path I was already on was correct until I reached out to DoJ. My baby is due in October and I'm very worried about continuing accessing healthcare and having a valid permit during the birth. My child will also be an Irish and British citizen as my husband is a UK national and the Common travel agreement between UK and Ireland.

Please any help or advise is appreciated.

laika_dogg
Newly Registered
Posts: 5
Joined: Thu Jul 10, 2025 9:19 pm
United Kingdom

Re: Eu Treaty files waiting time - EU1 or EU1A

Post by laika_dogg » Sun Jul 13, 2025 7:59 am

Hi guys,

Did anyone (non EEA national of a UK spouse) move to Ireland post Brexit but exercising their EU treaty withdrawal agreement rights?

Or anyone moving post Brexit as a family member of UK national moving to Ireland first time post Brexit i.e not exercising their withdrawal agreement rights.
Does your IRP say Stamp 4D or Article 50 TEU?

Any input from anyone who knows about this situation is incredibly appreciated. Thanks a million.

farofa_de_banana
Newly Registered
Posts: 9
Joined: Thu Mar 07, 2024 11:54 am
Brazil

Re: Eu Treaty files waiting time - EU1 or EU1A

Post by farofa_de_banana » Tue Jul 15, 2025 3:25 pm

06/02/2025 : sent documents
07/02/2025 : documents received
04/03/2025 : received acknowledgement letter. It asks to send documents but the list is empty. IRP was granted until 06/08/2025
27/06/2025: I (EU citizen) was called to provide latest payslips
09/07/2025 received letter with the approval. Applied online for irp renewal

farofa_de_banana
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Posts: 9
Joined: Thu Mar 07, 2024 11:54 am
Brazil

Re: Eu Treaty files waiting time - EU1 or EU1A

Post by farofa_de_banana » Tue Jul 15, 2025 3:27 pm

laika_dogg wrote:
Sun Jul 13, 2025 7:59 am
Hi guys,

Did anyone (non EEA national of a UK spouse) move to Ireland post Brexit but exercising their EU treaty withdrawal agreement rights?

Or anyone moving post Brexit as a family member of UK national moving to Ireland first time post Brexit i.e not exercising their withdrawal agreement rights.
Does your IRP say Stamp 4D or Article 50 TEU?

Any input from anyone who knows about this situation is incredibly appreciated. Thanks a million.
If you've been told you are elligible and should apply with EUTR1 and sent the appropriate documents I believe you should receive soon a letter temporary permission. You can see in the timelines posted here how long it's usually taking.

castelrink
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Posts: 5
Joined: Mon Jun 23, 2025 4:05 pm
Spain

Re: Eu Treaty files waiting time - EU1 or EU1A

Post by castelrink » Wed Jul 16, 2025 10:00 am

Here is our updated timeline:

20 January 2025 – Sent all required documents
21 January 2025 – Documents were received by EU Treaty Rights
17 February 2025 – Received temporary Stamp 4 (valid until 16 August 2025)
4 July 2025 – Received email requesting additional documents
11 July 2025 – Received approval letter and applied for IRP card the following Monday (servers were down on the day of the letter)

We contacted several TDs for help; only one actively supported us through the process. After her query to EU Treaty Rights, we received the request for additional documents.

farofa_de_banana
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Posts: 9
Joined: Thu Mar 07, 2024 11:54 am
Brazil

Re: Eu Treaty files waiting time - EU1 or EU1A

Post by farofa_de_banana » Thu Jul 24, 2025 4:40 pm

06/02/2025 : sent documents
07/02/2025 : documents received
04/03/2025 : received acknowledgement letter. It asks to send documents but the list is empty. IRP was granted until 06/08/2025
27/06/2025: I (EU citizen) was called to provide latest payslips
09/07/2025: received letter with the approval. Applied online for irp renewal
23/07/2025: IRP renewal approved

ukandusmarried
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United States of America

Re: Eu Treaty files waiting time - EU1 or EU1A

Post by ukandusmarried » Wed Aug 06, 2025 11:18 am

Hi all, I wanted to share my details below in case anyone has any insight or this might help any others in a similar situation:

11 July 2025: Sent EUTR1 application
14 July 2025: Application received by EU Treaty Rights Division
6 August 2025: Received denial letter


I applied as a qualified family member (spouse) of a UK National due to his residence in Ireland before the end of the transition period which ended 31 December 2020. The decision I received stated that because my we were not married before that date (we got married this year), I am unable to apply via the EUTR1. The letter directed me to apply under the new scheme for UK Nationals wishing to bring their family members to Ireland. However, that new scheme clearly states that it does NOT apply to UK Nationals who were resident in Ireland before the end of the transition period. It clearly states this on both the policy documents and directly on the Immigration website.

I have submitted a query on the ISD portal for more assistance, and have reached out to a solicitor.

Note: The immigration officer and her supervisor at Dublin airport reviewed the new policy and allowed me entry into the Ireland without a Preclearance (which the new scheme I mentioned above requires for US citizens). I was instructed that my next steps were to set an appointment at Burgh Quay, which I have scheduled for September. However, one of the required documents for that appointment is my Preclearance approval which I do not have, nor require. I received conflicting advice (outlined below) to apply via EUTR1, so I went ahead and did that.

I had also spoken to 3 organizations prior to entering this process that help with immigration rights, and one even contacted ISD on my behalf to confirm I can apply via EUTR1. I also submitted a query on the portal confirming I am eligible to apply. Both answers came back yes--I can apply. So this has all been extremely confusing.

It seems as if we do not fall under either scheme. Once I have more information, I will share it. If anyone has any advice, I'd greatly appreciate it.

Vadrar
Member of Standing
Posts: 372
Joined: Mon Jun 05, 2023 1:06 pm
Ireland

Re: Eu Treaty files waiting time - EU1 or EU1A

Post by Vadrar » Wed Aug 06, 2025 2:16 pm

ukandusmarried wrote:
Wed Aug 06, 2025 11:18 am
Hi all, I wanted to share my details below in case anyone has any insight or this might help any others in a similar situation:

11 July 2025: Sent EUTR1 application
14 July 2025: Application received by EU Treaty Rights Division
6 August 2025: Received denial letter


I applied as a qualified family member (spouse) of a UK National due to his residence in Ireland before the end of the transition period which ended 31 December 2020. The decision I received stated that because my we were not married before that date (we got married this year), I am unable to apply via the EUTR1. The letter directed me to apply under the new scheme for UK Nationals wishing to bring their family members to Ireland. However, that new scheme clearly states that it does NOT apply to UK Nationals who were resident in Ireland before the end of the transition period. It clearly states this on both the policy documents and directly on the Immigration website.

I have submitted a query on the ISD portal for more assistance, and have reached out to a solicitor.

Note: The immigration officer and her supervisor at Dublin airport reviewed the new policy and allowed me entry into the Ireland without a Preclearance (which the new scheme I mentioned above requires for US citizens). I was instructed that my next steps were to set an appointment at Burgh Quay, which I have scheduled for September. However, one of the required documents for that appointment is my Preclearance approval which I do not have, nor require. I received conflicting advice (outlined below) to apply via EUTR1, so I went ahead and did that.

I had also spoken to 3 organizations prior to entering this process that help with immigration rights, and one even contacted ISD on my behalf to confirm I can apply via EUTR1. I also submitted a query on the portal confirming I am eligible to apply. Both answers came back yes--I can apply. So this has all been extremely confusing.

It seems as if we do not fall under either scheme. Once I have more information, I will share it. If anyone has any advice, I'd greatly appreciate it.
TL:DR: to qualify under the WA you need to be able to prove you were in the relationship prior to 31 Dec 2020 and that is has been continuous since then. Anyone unable to prove this falls under the new scheme. The decision and advice you received appears to be correct unless you can prove your relationship pre-dated Brexit.

Detail here, mainly included as a source of reference to anyone asking this question later:
To qualify under the Withdrawal Agreement (WA) rights you need to be able to prove 2 things. 1) The British partner was residing in Ireland before 31 Dec 2020 and 2) the partner is an 'eligible family member' in that the durable relationship can be proved to have been established before 31 Dec 2020.

To prove the relationship existed prior to 2020 (where there hasn't been a formal registration like marriage or civil union) applicants often submit a number of proofs such as a lease or mortgage in both names, utility bills in both names, joint bank accounts or birth certificates of children naming both parents. Less often they offer a will naming the partner, life insurance naming partner as beneficiary or joint health insurance. Emails, texts, letters, photos, holiday receipts etc are typically not considered relevant proof.

Anyone who has a relationship starting after 2020 or can't prove it started before that date falls outside of the WA and instead operate withins the new scheme, irrepective of when the British person resided in Ireland.

I'm not surprised you are getting confusing information from Irish sources. Withdrawal Agreement rights are only patchily understood in Ireland because it was a declaratory country AND is also party to the Common Travel Area. So many British simply rely on CTA rights, because typically they cover everything they need, and many Irish immigration officials don't really understand the WA. The WA is the same set of rights across all EU countries (though admin and implementation processes can differ, and there are some national rules on sub-section rules.) You will therefore often find a better understanding of joining partners rights in countries that were declaratory but not party to the CTA (Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czechia, Estonia, Germany, Greece, Italy, Ireland, Lithuania, Poland, Portugal, Spain, and Slovakia) than in Ireland. In summary, this means that chat boards for those countries will often have a greater understanding of rights than Irish equivalents.

In any case, because the WA is common across all EU countries, Section 3.9 in this document outlines the case regarding all partners joining British WA beneficiaries in any EU country:

https://commission.europa.eu/system/fil ... s_en_0.pdf

As you married after 2020, the relevant paras are:
"3.9. I am the unmarried partner of a United Kingdom national residing
in the host EU state. I plan to join him there but I can do it only
in four years because of existing work commitments in my
country, Canada. Will I be able to join him?
Yes. The Withdrawal Agreement protects partners who had been in a durable partnership with a
United Kingdom national at the end of the transition period but were not residing with that partner
in the host EU state. You will be able to join your partner in the host EU state, provided that you
remain in a durable partnership with him at the point you seek to come to the host EU state. You
may have to make an application to the national authorities under the national residence scheme
to have your new status registered/certified after your arrival in the host EU state.
The requirement of durability of the relationship must be assessed in the light of the objective to
maintain the unity of the family in a broad sense. National rules can refer to a minimum amount
of time as a criterion for whether a partnership can be considered as durable. However, in this
case national rules must ensure that other relevant aspects (such as for example a joint mortgage
to buy a home) are taken into account. "


The document refers to national rules on minimum time the relationship must have existed prior to 31 Dec 2020 to be considered eligible. Ireland holds that marriage even one day before 31 Dec 2020 would be sufficient, or 2 years of documented relationship in the case of a de facto relationship. Those national rules are listed here, in section 6:

https://www.irishimmigration.ie/wp-cont ... ission.pdf

laika_dogg
Newly Registered
Posts: 5
Joined: Thu Jul 10, 2025 9:19 pm
United Kingdom

Re: Eu Treaty files waiting time - EU1 or EU1A

Post by laika_dogg » Fri Aug 08, 2025 8:50 am

ukandusmarried wrote:
Wed Aug 06, 2025 11:18 am
Hi all, I wanted to share my details below in case anyone has any insight or this might help any others in a similar situation:

11 July 2025: Sent EUTR1 application
14 July 2025: Application received by EU Treaty Rights Division
6 August 2025: Received denial letter


I applied as a qualified family member (spouse) of a UK National due to his residence in Ireland before the end of the transition period which ended 31 December 2020. The decision I received stated that because my we were not married before that date (we got married this year), I am unable to apply via the EUTR1. The letter directed me to apply under the new scheme for UK Nationals wishing to bring their family members to Ireland. However, that new scheme clearly states that it does NOT apply to UK Nationals who were resident in Ireland before the end of the transition period. It clearly states this on both the policy documents and directly on the Immigration website.

I have submitted a query on the ISD portal for more assistance, and have reached out to a solicitor.

Note: The immigration officer and her supervisor at Dublin airport reviewed the new policy and allowed me entry into the Ireland without a Preclearance (which the new scheme I mentioned above requires for US citizens). I was instructed that my next steps were to set an appointment at Burgh Quay, which I have scheduled for September. However, one of the required documents for that appointment is my Preclearance approval which I do not have, nor require. I received conflicting advice (outlined below) to apply via EUTR1, so I went ahead and did that.

I had also spoken to 3 organizations prior to entering this process that help with immigration rights, and one even contacted ISD on my behalf to confirm I can apply via EUTR1. I also submitted a query on the portal confirming I am eligible to apply. Both answers came back yes--I can apply. So this has all been extremely confusing.

It seems as if we do not fall under either scheme. Once I have more information, I will share it. If anyone has any advice, I'd greatly appreciate it.

Hi,
I am in a very similar situation as you. My husband grew up in Ireland and moved to Dubai for work temporarily. We have been back in Ireland since 2022 but out of the blue we are facing immigration issues where the Department is confused if he was exercising CTA or EU Withdrawal rights.

Just a few questions if you dont mind me asking :
1. When did you and your UK spouse start your relationship?
2. When did your UK spouse leave Ireland and when did he return back? How long was he living in Ireland before leaving? (The Withdrawal Agreement allows for a maximum of 5 years away if he was a permanent resident in Ireland prior to leaving. 2 years if he wansn't a permanent resident)

laika_dogg
Newly Registered
Posts: 5
Joined: Thu Jul 10, 2025 9:19 pm
United Kingdom

Re: Eu Treaty files waiting time - EU1 or EU1A

Post by laika_dogg » Fri Aug 08, 2025 9:53 am

Vadrar wrote:
Wed Aug 06, 2025 2:16 pm
ukandusmarried wrote:
Wed Aug 06, 2025 11:18 am
Hi all, I wanted to share my details below in case anyone has any insight or this might help any others in a similar situation:

11 July 2025: Sent EUTR1 application
14 July 2025: Application received by EU Treaty Rights Division
6 August 2025: Received denial letter


I applied as a qualified family member (spouse) of a UK National due to his residence in Ireland before the end of the transition period which ended 31 December 2020. The decision I received stated that because my we were not married before that date (we got married this year), I am unable to apply via the EUTR1. The letter directed me to apply under the new scheme for UK Nationals wishing to bring their family members to Ireland. However, that new scheme clearly states that it does NOT apply to UK Nationals who were resident in Ireland before the end of the transition period. It clearly states this on both the policy documents and directly on the Immigration website.

I have submitted a query on the ISD portal for more assistance, and have reached out to a solicitor.

Note: The immigration officer and her supervisor at Dublin airport reviewed the new policy and allowed me entry into the Ireland without a Preclearance (which the new scheme I mentioned above requires for US citizens). I was instructed that my next steps were to set an appointment at Burgh Quay, which I have scheduled for September. However, one of the required documents for that appointment is my Preclearance approval which I do not have, nor require. I received conflicting advice (outlined below) to apply via EUTR1, so I went ahead and did that.

I had also spoken to 3 organizations prior to entering this process that help with immigration rights, and one even contacted ISD on my behalf to confirm I can apply via EUTR1. I also submitted a query on the portal confirming I am eligible to apply. Both answers came back yes--I can apply. So this has all been extremely confusing.

It seems as if we do not fall under either scheme. Once I have more information, I will share it. If anyone has any advice, I'd greatly appreciate it.
TL:DR: to qualify under the WA you need to be able to prove you were in the relationship prior to 31 Dec 2020 and that is has been continuous since then. Anyone unable to prove this falls under the new scheme. The decision and advice you received appears to be correct unless you can prove your relationship pre-dated Brexit.

Detail here, mainly included as a source of reference to anyone asking this question later:
To qualify under the Withdrawal Agreement (WA) rights you need to be able to prove 2 things. 1) The British partner was residing in Ireland before 31 Dec 2020 and 2) the partner is an 'eligible family member' in that the durable relationship can be proved to have been established before 31 Dec 2020.

To prove the relationship existed prior to 2020 (where there hasn't been a formal registration like marriage or civil union) applicants often submit a number of proofs such as a lease or mortgage in both names, utility bills in both names, joint bank accounts or birth certificates of children naming both parents. Less often they offer a will naming the partner, life insurance naming partner as beneficiary or joint health insurance. Emails, texts, letters, photos, holiday receipts etc are typically not considered relevant proof.

Anyone who has a relationship starting after 2020 or can't prove it started before that date falls outside of the WA and instead operate withins the new scheme, irrepective of when the British person resided in Ireland.

I'm not surprised you are getting confusing information from Irish sources. Withdrawal Agreement rights are only patchily understood in Ireland because it was a declaratory country AND is also party to the Common Travel Area. So many British simply rely on CTA rights, because typically they cover everything they need, and many Irish immigration officials don't really understand the WA. The WA is the same set of rights across all EU countries (though admin and implementation processes can differ, and there are some national rules on sub-section rules.) You will therefore often find a better understanding of joining partners rights in countries that were declaratory but not party to the CTA (Bulgaria, Croatia, Cyprus, Czechia, Estonia, Germany, Greece, Italy, Ireland, Lithuania, Poland, Portugal, Spain, and Slovakia) than in Ireland. In summary, this means that chat boards for those countries will often have a greater understanding of rights than Irish equivalents.

In any case, because the WA is common across all EU countries, Section 3.9 in this document outlines the case regarding all partners joining British WA beneficiaries in any EU country:

https://commission.europa.eu/system/fil ... s_en_0.pdf

As you married after 2020, the relevant paras are:
"3.9. I am the unmarried partner of a United Kingdom national residing
in the host EU state. I plan to join him there but I can do it only
in four years because of existing work commitments in my
country, Canada. Will I be able to join him?
Yes. The Withdrawal Agreement protects partners who had been in a durable partnership with a
United Kingdom national at the end of the transition period but were not residing with that partner
in the host EU state. You will be able to join your partner in the host EU state, provided that you
remain in a durable partnership with him at the point you seek to come to the host EU state. You
may have to make an application to the national authorities under the national residence scheme
to have your new status registered/certified after your arrival in the host EU state.
The requirement of durability of the relationship must be assessed in the light of the objective to
maintain the unity of the family in a broad sense. National rules can refer to a minimum amount
of time as a criterion for whether a partnership can be considered as durable. However, in this
case national rules must ensure that other relevant aspects (such as for example a joint mortgage
to buy a home) are taken into account. "


The document refers to national rules on minimum time the relationship must have existed prior to 31 Dec 2020 to be considered eligible. Ireland holds that marriage even one day before 31 Dec 2020 would be sufficient, or 2 years of documented relationship in the case of a de facto relationship. Those national rules are listed here, in section 6:

https://www.irishimmigration.ie/wp-cont ... ission.pdf
Hi Vadaar,

This is insanely informative. Can you please help me as well.

My husband is a UK national who moved to Ireland with his family when he was 7 years old. This is his timeline.
1997 : Moved to Ireland at age 7 with parents and brother.
1997 - 2011 : Studied school + university in Ireland.
2011 - 2018 : Periods of unemployment and full-term employment.
Mid 2018 : Moved to Dubai for work.
August 2018 : When we met. Started living together in January 2019.
October 2020 : Married in Dubai at the British embassy.
August 2022 : Returned back to Ireland.

Withdrawal Agreement, Art 15 (3):
"3. Once acquired, the right of permanent residence shall be lost only through absence from the host State for a period exceeding 5 consecutive years."

Which is different from temporary residence in the State : Article 16(3) of Directive 2004/38/EC:
"3. Continuity of residence shall not be affected by temporary absences not exceeding a total of six months a year, or by absences of a longer duration for compulsory military service, or by one absence of a maximum of twelve consecutive months for important reasons such as pregnancy and childbirth, serious illness, study or vocational training, or a posting in another Member State or a third country.

4. Once acquired, the right of permanent residence shall be lost only through absence from the host Member State for a period exceeding two consecutive years."

Even while he was away in Dubai, he maintained his family ties (his parents and brother are Irish citizens now), bank account where he kept sending himself money earned in Dubai periodically, came home multiple times from :
July 2018 to late August 2018
December 2018 for Christmas
July 2019 to August 2019
December 2019 (both of us came to Ireland for Christmas)
December 2021 (both of us came to Ireland for Christmas after COVID lockdown was eased)
Returned back to Ireland August 2022

He was never absent from Ireland for longer than 5 years consecutively (longest being 22 months due to COVID)

Anyway, in early 2022 I applied for my long term visa to move to Ireland with him. I need to a visa to enter Ireland and I cannot apply for short term visa when the intention is to move here, so we were advised to apply for the Long term join UK spouse visa which they sent through the pre-clearance office and I was given the D visa to move here.

At the airport I was advised to go to the Garda and apply for my IRP. I had all the necessary documents and the Garda gave me my IRP with stamp 'Article 50 TEU' for 1 year. Mind you, I had no idea what this was until he gave it to me. He told me to come back in a year but meanwhile that I could see if I can apply for EUTR1. I had no idea what this was or about the withdrawal agreement at this point. I emailed EU Treaty rights explaining my condition and they told me that I am eligible and to apply IF I WANT. So I did not. The next year in 2023 I went back to the Garda and showed them my documents for renewal and he gave me my IRP for 2 years this time with the same stamp 'Article 50 TEU'.

My current card expires on 24th August 2025, I reached out to the Garda for renewal in June and he told me its all moved online. One of the required documents is the current permission letter from DoJ which I was never given. I emailed the DoJ explaining my full situation and requesting the letter. They told me to apply EUTR1 and thats the only way to get it. I asked them multiple times if it is the right lane for me, but they never gave me a proper answer. They were very vague and told me to apply EUTR1, so i did.

I am currently 8 months pregnant and this vagueness and uncertainity was causing extreme stress coz I do not want to be undocumented while my baby is born or lose access to maternity care or be a burden to the State. My husband contacted multiple TDs and all of them were very helpful. One of them reached out to EU division asking for clarification.

05/07/2025 - Documents submitted.
08/07/2025 - Documents received.
06/08/2025 - Letter from EU Treaty Rights telling me I would be processed under WA and requesting more documents. But they never mentioned anything about a temporary IRP at all which is causing me extreme stress coz my current card expires in 2 weeks.

Out of the documents they require as proof of my husband's activities in the State prior to end of transition period,
- 'private health insurance for him and his dependants for the duration he was studying'. This is very confusing as UK nationals do not need insurance in Ireland under CTA which was emphasised after WA was announced as well. However, I have proof of private medical insurance when he was doing his Masters after we returned to Ireland in 2022 until he got a job post graduation in 2023. (I do not have private insurance now)
- 'proof of financial resources for corresponding period'. We have this for 2022 but he does not have access to this when he was a child from 1997 to 2011. Coz UK nationals did not need that.

I am worried that for the duration he was a kid or for the duration he did his Masters in 2022 to 2023, will it be heavily penalised that he did not have a private health insurance under EU Treaty Rights?
UK Nationals are by default given rights under CTA, will that be viewed as violating EU Treaty Rights??

This is extremely frustrating coz we never even applied for this to begin with. We did not want to invoke the WA rights UNTIL they forced us to by giving me the Article 50 TEU stamp??

This is honesly causing me lots of issues with my pregnancy and I am freaking out. Does anyone know what my best options are? I contacted Immigration council who think I am in the right and I did not do anything wrong. I contacted a handful of immigration lawyers who are giving me very confusing and contradicting answers. What do I do if they reject my EUTR1? I cannot fly while heavily pregnant and my child will be an Irish and British citizen born in Ireland. They cannot take that away from her either.

Vadrar
Member of Standing
Posts: 372
Joined: Mon Jun 05, 2023 1:06 pm
Ireland

Re: Eu Treaty files waiting time - EU1 or EU1A

Post by Vadrar » Fri Aug 08, 2025 8:41 pm

laika_dogg wrote:
Fri Aug 08, 2025 9:53 am
Vadrar wrote:
Wed Aug 06, 2025 2:16 pm


Hi Vadaar,

This is insanely informative. Can you please help me as well.

My husband is a UK national who moved to Ireland with his family when he was 7 years old. This is his timeline.
1997 : Moved to Ireland at age 7 with parents and brother.
1997 - 2011 : Studied school + university in Ireland.
2011 - 2018 : Periods of unemployment and full-term employment.
Mid 2018 : Moved to Dubai for work.
August 2018 : When we met. Started living together in January 2019.
October 2020 : Married in Dubai at the British embassy.
August 2022 : Returned back to Ireland.

Withdrawal Agreement, Art 15 (3):
"3. Once acquired, the right of permanent residence shall be lost only through absence from the host State for a period exceeding 5 consecutive years."

Which is different from temporary residence in the State : Article 16(3) of Directive 2004/38/EC:
"3. Continuity of residence shall not be affected by temporary absences not exceeding a total of six months a year, or by absences of a longer duration for compulsory military service, or by one absence of a maximum of twelve consecutive months for important reasons such as pregnancy and childbirth, serious illness, study or vocational training, or a posting in another Member State or a third country.

4. Once acquired, the right of permanent residence shall be lost only through absence from the host Member State for a period exceeding two consecutive years."

Even while he was away in Dubai, he maintained his family ties (his parents and brother are Irish citizens now), bank account where he kept sending himself money earned in Dubai periodically, came home multiple times from :
July 2018 to late August 2018
December 2018 for Christmas
July 2019 to August 2019
December 2019 (both of us came to Ireland for Christmas)
December 2021 (both of us came to Ireland for Christmas after COVID lockdown was eased)
Returned back to Ireland August 2022

He was never absent from Ireland for longer than 5 years consecutively (longest being 22 months due to COVID)

Anyway, in early 2022 I applied for my long term visa to move to Ireland with him. I need to a visa to enter Ireland and I cannot apply for short term visa when the intention is to move here, so we were advised to apply for the Long term join UK spouse visa which they sent through the pre-clearance office and I was given the D visa to move here.

At the airport I was advised to go to the Garda and apply for my IRP. I had all the necessary documents and the Garda gave me my IRP with stamp 'Article 50 TEU' for 1 year. Mind you, I had no idea what this was until he gave it to me. He told me to come back in a year but meanwhile that I could see if I can apply for EUTR1. I had no idea what this was or about the withdrawal agreement at this point. I emailed EU Treaty rights explaining my condition and they told me that I am eligible and to apply IF I WANT. So I did not. The next year in 2023 I went back to the Garda and showed them my documents for renewal and he gave me my IRP for 2 years this time with the same stamp 'Article 50 TEU'.

My current card expires on 24th August 2025, I reached out to the Garda for renewal in June and he told me its all moved online. One of the required documents is the current permission letter from DoJ which I was never given. I emailed the DoJ explaining my full situation and requesting the letter. They told me to apply EUTR1 and thats the only way to get it. I asked them multiple times if it is the right lane for me, but they never gave me a proper answer. They were very vague and told me to apply EUTR1, so i did.

I am currently 8 months pregnant and this vagueness and uncertainity was causing extreme stress coz I do not want to be undocumented while my baby is born or lose access to maternity care or be a burden to the State. My husband contacted multiple TDs and all of them were very helpful. One of them reached out to EU division asking for clarification.

05/07/2025 - Documents submitted.
08/07/2025 - Documents received.
06/08/2025 - Letter from EU Treaty Rights telling me I would be processed under WA and requesting more documents. But they never mentioned anything about a temporary IRP at all which is causing me extreme stress coz my current card expires in 2 weeks.

Out of the documents they require as proof of my husband's activities in the State prior to end of transition period,
- 'private health insurance for him and his dependants for the duration he was studying'. This is very confusing as UK nationals do not need insurance in Ireland under CTA which was emphasised after WA was announced as well. However, I have proof of private medical insurance when he was doing his Masters after we returned to Ireland in 2022 until he got a job post graduation in 2023. (I do not have private insurance now)
- 'proof of financial resources for corresponding period'. We have this for 2022 but he does not have access to this when he was a child from 1997 to 2011. Coz UK nationals did not need that.

I am worried that for the duration he was a kid or for the duration he did his Masters in 2022 to 2023, will it be heavily penalised that he did not have a private health insurance under EU Treaty Rights?
UK Nationals are by default given rights under CTA, will that be viewed as violating EU Treaty Rights??

This is extremely frustrating coz we never even applied for this to begin with. We did not want to invoke the WA rights UNTIL they forced us to by giving me the Article 50 TEU stamp??

This is honesly causing me lots of issues with my pregnancy and I am freaking out. Does anyone know what my best options are? I contacted Immigration council who think I am in the right and I did not do anything wrong. I contacted a handful of immigration lawyers who are giving me very confusing and contradicting answers. What do I do if they reject my EUTR1? I cannot fly while heavily pregnant and my child will be an Irish and British citizen born in Ireland. They cannot take that away from her either.
TL:DR You sound quite anxious, so let me start by saying you don't have anything to worry about. What you do have is options and none of them are bad. Neither you nor your baby are facing risk or deprivation.

You've lodged an application so the expiry of your IRP in 2 weeks is irrelevant. (Administratively it is a little inconvenient, but you have permission to be in Ireland pending a decision from them.) Your status has no effect on your child's nationalities because no matter what her father is British; I'm sure no-one has even suggested otherwise. You have lots of options for residency status, but you will need to choose a lane, not mix and match parts of the CTA with parts of the WA. The Irish govt isn't forcing or tricking you into any particular status, or trying to reject you. They've tried to accommodate you in what is considered to be the most beneficial Treaty (the WA/EUTR). If you aren't able to meet the requirements you can simply apply via a different route (CTA current join spouse or parent of Irish child.) You aren't penalised by switching to another option if EUTR is rejected. Basically, you are fine and you and baby will be fine. You've got so many options that its simply a matter of you wading through admin until its all settled.

Detail:
OK you seem to be confusing the relationship between the CTA and WA. They are different treaties; offering different rights via different eligibility criteria. When you are talking about derived rights (ie when a spouse of a beneficiary wants to access rights via rights originally obtained by the beneficiary) you pretty much need to chose whether you go via the WA channel or CTA channel. You can't mix and match them.

That is to say, you can't pick duties of one treaty (eg no health insurance required under CTA) and rely on that for WA benefits (joining spouse WA rights and EUTR rights.) To enjoy the benefits of the WA/EUTR you need to comply with requirements like needing health insurance, just like other EU nationals would do if they want to access EUTR. Not complying with EUTR obligations (like having health insurance) doesn't mean he was doing anything wrong - it just means he was here under CTA rights. But you can't say you were meeting CTA obligations so therefore are owed access to WA benefits. For most Brits they won't even be aware of which Treaty they are operating under *except* when applying for EUTR rights post Brexit; when they are required to pick. its exactly the same for Irish in UK post Brexit - its only recently they've needed to clarify if they are operating under CTA or EU Settlement Scheme (WA equivalent), especially when getting a spouse to join them. Like you and your husband, they've needed to pick a Treaty, not swing between them.

So you can pick CTA route - no health insurance needed, but you'd join under the current join spouse programme (with the higher income requirements etc). Or you can pick WA/EUTR route - lower income requirements, but health insurance required as per standard requirements in Ireland for EU freedom of movement eligibility. (and soon you'll be able to choose parent of Irish child if you wanted.) If EUTR gets rejected, just apply via the current CTA join spouse route. Or after your child is born, apply via parent of Irish child.

It is not discriminatory for the Irish government to require you to comply with the channel you are choosing. The fact that Brits can choose whether they use CTA or WA is a benefit, but having two options doesn't mean you can cherry pick which parts you want to combine. The Irish govt are not violating any rights of either treaty by asking you to pick a lane.

Apply for EUTR rights. If that gets rejected because lack of health insurance means they think you weren't complying with EU eligibility, apply under the CTA join spouse scheme, or at your child's birth apply as parent of Irish child. Your child's nationality is unaffected by this process (assuming her father remains legally resident in Ireland at the time of her birth and she is born on the island of Ireland, as she will be principally deriving her rights from him.) I'm sure no-one will have suggested they won't be granting her Irish and British nationality; that's just not a thing. As you have existing residency applications lodged you won't be considered to be irregularly present while you are waiting on a response. And worse case scenario in a month you can lodge parent of an Irish child.

They aren't forcing you into anything - they are trying to give you the best quality rights (which arguably are WA/EUTR.) If EUTR doesn't work out, make an application via route 2 or 3. But mostly take a breath and focus on the fact that the worst you are facing from an immigration perspective is paperwork. You have options, not risk.

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